Man with diaper fetish back in jail

HOOKSETT — A 25-year-old convicted of attempting to expose himself to in-home caregivers by faking a brain injury and asking them to change his diaper was sentenced to two-to-four years in state prison for violating the terms of his parole last week.

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By Nick B. Reid

seacoastonline.com

By Nick B. Reid

Posted Oct. 11, 2013 at 2:00 AM

By Nick B. Reid

Posted Oct. 11, 2013 at 2:00 AM

» Social News

HOOKSETT — A 25-year-old convicted of attempting to expose himself to in-home caregivers by faking a brain injury and asking them to change his diaper was sentenced to two-to-four years in state prison for violating the terms of his parole last week.

Eric Carrier, 25, had his prison sentence deferred as part of a plea deal struck in May and was free assuming he maintained good behavior.

Prosecutors requested that sentence be imposed after Carrier was arrested again and Judge N. William Delker agreed.

As part of the case, Norman Marquis, a parole officer, wrote that Carrier failed to comply with the order to stop contacting home care agencies when he, on July 28, called "Personal Touch Home Care" using a fake name and alleging his son needed a diaper change.

On Aug. 15, Marquis continues, Carrier used the Internet to find the telephone number of an in-home childcare service agency, then drove to that location in New Boston and attempted to get his soiled diaper changed. According to a police affidavit, the caregiver could smell Carrier as she spoke to him in her doorway, and Carrier made reference that it would be a "long day" when she refused to change his diaper.

Carrier then "continuously denied" to his parole officer his Aug. 15 whereabouts and also denied being the person identified in the corresponding police report. He also violated a term that prohibited him from using the Internet, Marquis wrote.

Carrier was indicted in Rockingham Superior Court in September 2012 for much of the same behavior on a charge of attempted indecent exposure and lewdness out of the Hampton Police Department. He was released on probation early in the summer.

Carrier was back in jail for five days ending Aug. 2 after the Hooksett Police Department received report that he was contacting adult care agencies and pretending his son had a disability, Marquis wrote. As part of Carrier's probation, his parole officer was given authority to impose a one-to-five day jail sentence for violating a condition of his probation.

Less than three weeks after he was released on that five-day hold, Carrier made contact with the New Boston caregiver, Marquis wrote.

"The defendant lied to me several times before I shared with him several bits of information that I had received from the police report," Marquis wrote about an Aug. 20 meeting with Carrier.

Carrier admitted to purchasing a TracFone from WalMart and using it to access Craigslist before driving to the New Boston home, Marquis wrote.

"He then had a conversation with the victim and admitted to bringing a duffle bag full of diapers, wipes and a box of gloves," Marquis wrote. "He states he then destroyed the phone in the Merrimack River and put the other items in his garbage."

Marquis concluded that it was his "grave concern that (Carrier) is becoming an increasingly significant risk to public safety in his current condition."

Carrier was ordered upon his release on probation to undergo sex offender counseling, to never be in unsupervised company of minors at any time, to write a letter of apology to his victim, to have no unsupervised access to devices connecting to the Internet, and to have no contact with the victim or her family.

Carrier said in court earlier this year that he hasn't been diagnosed with any type of mental health disorder.